INCUBATING w/FRIENDS! w/Sally Sunshine Shipped Eggs No problem!

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Good luck!  I hope this hatch goes great!  That will be a lot of chicks!!!

Just curious,I think my incubator will look something like this when I go into lockdown.   How do the chickies hatch when they are fit so tightly together?  Do they just climb around on the other eggs?  How do they kick free if there is no room for them to move?  Do you take out hatched chicks sooner in this set up?

Thanks!


Good luck with yours! Honestly, my hatcher has never been this full so I'm playing it by ear but every egg is tilted and leaning up against the egg behind it so they're not wedged in and should be able to kick out still. I will be pulling out chicks and shells here and there to minimize the crowding.

o,ok that's a lot.I wish u the best of luck


Thank you :)
 
Aurora, that is one packed bator. I'm thinking of packing mine like that, but standing them up in cartons. Then, I can tilt the whole bator to turn them. We'll see how many eggs I end up setting! Other option would be to set them in double decker fashion.

I caution against tilting the whole incubator unless you have a quality forced air system.
Just as thermal stratification will cause the temperature to be different from the top to the bottom of the egg, a tilted incubator will have too low of temperatures on the low end an too high on the high end.
 
I was going to try to get pictures as my one egg progressed, but it didn't do much last night or early this morning, so I didn't bother taking more pictures, though I did check several times to see if it was still alive, and of course it was. Had to run to the vet this morning, and guess what? That silly little chick finished zipping in the two hours I was gone! Will post pictures of the lone chick later.
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-Kathy
 
I was going to try to get pictures as my one egg progressed, but it didn't do much last night or early this morning, so I didn't bother taking more pictures, though I did check several times to see if it was still alive, and of course it was. Had to run to the vet this morning, and guess what? That silly little chick finished zipping in the two hours I was gone! Will post pictures of the lone chick later.
big_smile.png


-Kathy

That's cause it knew you weren't watching
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Lost power here. Did ya miss me?

Went to get feed & a haircut; by the time I got back, power was restored, so no impact at all.

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whistle whistle toot toot on the hair cut!!
Hi guys,

I'm at day 8 or so of my 3rd incubation (2 last year + this one), impatient as hell, so please let me tell some of my stories while I wait for the eggs to hatch :)

For my first incubation, I ordered eggs by mail. Big mistake! Out of 20 eggs only 1 hatched. Most of the others didn't even start developing. After I gave up on them, I hard-boiled them and gave them to adult chickens to eat - when I cut the cooked eggs in half, they were all scrambled inside. Total waste of time and money. I won't order eggs by mail again if I can avoid it.

Next I found some sellers that I could drive to, so I got 10 partridge Brahma and 13 silver Wyandotte eggs. Out of those, 21 hatched and mostly grew into beautiful birds. However, I wasn't at all gentle with those eggs. In fact, I did all kinds of not recommended things.

For the start, 3 or 4 times I almost cooked them - my incubator is rather low-tech, so the thermostat keeps the stable temperature only if the temperature of the environment is stable too. I noticed that the temperature in the incubator goes up every day around noon, so I paid attention to lower it at that time and put it back up in the evening. But there were a few times when I found the thermometer showing 40 C (104 F) or close to it. I cooled the eggs down immediately, but I had no idea how much time did they spend like that - once I found the temperature so high after waking up at night - I guess I overdid it when putting the temperature back up in the evening. Luckily, nothing bad happened.

Next, I had to transport eggs with me to another place - me and my partner mostly work from home, but every 2 weeks or so we have to spend a few days in a city. I couldn't leave the incubator to anybody, so I packed the eggs in cardboard boxes with some cotton wool, brought them with us in the car, and plugged them in again. Next 2 days, I had to leave them alone during most of the day, and I was worried that they might cook if I leave them at normal temperature and it goes up around midday. So I decided to leave them at 35 C (95 F) both days (and brought the temperature back up after coming back in the evening). After 2 days, I packed them again into the car and took them back home. They continued to grow.

Finally, when they started hatching I couldn't leave them alone, so I kept opening the lid to check on them (the lid is mostly not transparent) and take occasional photos. The poor birds survived that, too. In fact, they were/are remarkably healthy. 2 developed a splayed leg within the first week, 4 unfortunately died because I was away and my partner let them sleep overnight on wet litter after drinking water was spilled, and 2 developed a limp later while growing up because of injuries. But no disease or sudden deaths for no reason.

With my current incubation, I started in the same style - rough - first day I kept the temperature lower than it should have been because I had a lot of work that didn't allow me to check the temperature regularly. Then I almost cooked them again (only once for now, thankfully). Last 6 days were rather uneventful, but in a few days I have to go to the city again for 3 days of work, and I'll have to repeat the same procedure as last year. At least I'll be able to take good care for them around the hatching days, as I set things up so that the hatch is around Easter or the day after.

This time I'm incubating 8 of our own eggs - I mean, our Brahma and Wyandotte eggs mixed with a mutt rooster, 9 speckled Sussex, 7 black Brahma and a few Orpington eggs I got as a gift. 2 of the eggs weren't growing, so I already discarded them. One confuses me - first 5 days it seemed empty, but last 2 days there seems to be a small spot, much smaller than in the other eggs and if it's growing, it's growing very slowly. Any such experience? Is it possible that some eggs can wait so long before starting to develop?
Welcome!!! interesting on moving the eggs like that!! Are you certain you dont have a cold spot in the bator? you are rotating eggs at times in there?

@mlm Mike are you seriously going to see Sally today? And you're not dropping off my duck on your way through?!?!
sorry no room for ducks this time!
 
Is Scoliosis what is commonly called "Curvature of the Spine"?
I think GD's case was genetic, as well, from her no-good father's side (he really is no good)
Is it curable at all?

Yes, it is where the spine curves. There isn't a cure, because scientists still don't really know what it's caused by. There are different braces for it though, and I'm going to get one soon. Two other girls at my school have it, but were diagnosed in 6th grade. We're in 8th grade now. One of them doesn't need to wear the brace anymore, the other only wears it at night. It's extremely hot and bulky. The required time to wear it is 20 hours at least. They look like in the picture, mine will look similar. I'm extremely unhappy about this. The brace has been known to cause psychological damage in people wearing it because they are usually about 12 when they get it, and obviously it's weird to other people that don't understand. I don't have a brace yet, it's being made, but here's the general idea.
400

400
 
I caution against tilting the whole incubator unless you have a quality forced air system.
Just as thermal stratification will cause the temperature to be different from the top to the bottom of the egg, a tilted incubator will have too low of temperatures on the low end an too high on the high end.
My brinsea tilts the entire incubator to turn the eggs. It's bizarre - I had to really pack the eggs in tight with padding. When we were testing it without eggs, and several loose hygrometers/thermometers - they really got tossed around sliding from one side to the other.

Is it ok in this, since it's designed to tilt? Until my square LG?
 
Yes, it is where the spine curves. There isn't a cure, because scientists still don't really know what it's caused by. There are different braces for it though, and I'm going to get one soon. Two other girls at my school have it, but were diagnosed in 6th grade. We're in 8th grade now. One of them doesn't need to wear the brace anymore, the other only wears it at night. It's extremely hot and bulky. The required time to wear it is 20 hours at least. They look like in the picture, mine will look similar. I'm extremely unhappy about this. The brace has been known to cause psychological damage in people wearing it because they are usually about 12 when they get it, and obviously it's weird to other people that don't understand. I don't have a brace yet, it's being made, but here's the general idea.

I'm sorry to hear you are going through this. I hope they find out what is causing it, and are able to treat you quickly! I wish you the best!!
 
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